Back to album

1877, Edgar Degas, Dancers Practicing at the Barre -- Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York)

From the museum label: The watering can, visible at left, was a standard fixture in ballet rehearsal rooms; water was sprinkled on the floor to keep dust from rising when ballerinas danced. Degas also used the watering can as a visual pun: its shape is mimicked by that of the dancer at right. Shown at the 1877 Impressionist exhibition, the painting was given by Degas to the collector Henri Rouart as a replacement for an earlier work (now lost), which the artist altered and accidentally destroyed. Louisine Havemeyer purchased it from Rouart's estate sale in 1912, for $95,700, a record price for a work by a living artist.

151 views
0 faves
0 comments
Uploaded on November 13, 2019
Taken on November 11, 2019